Opinion No. Oag 14-90, (1990)
This text of 79 Op. Att'y Gen. 86 (Opinion No. Oag 14-90, (1990)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
CAL W. KORNSTEDT, Corporation Counsel, Dane County
You have asked for my opinion as to whether a county may award public works contracts for $20,000 or less only to companies employing union labor and only to companies which are not involved in labor disputes.
As worded, the question contains ambiguities. Even a nonunion employer can have in its employ some who are union members, and the phrase "labor dispute" can include even the simplest grievance pending before an arbitrator. To avoid this ambiguity, therefore, I will construe your question to be whether a county can award public works contracts only to companies which have recognized a labor organization as the representative of its employes in an appropriate collective bargaining unit, commonly referred to as a unionized employer, and only to employers that are not engaged in a strike or lockout because of a dispute with such a labor organization.
In my opinion a county cannot deny contracts to employers engaged in labor disputes. Virtually this same question was decided by the United States Supreme Court in Golden StateTransit v. City of Los Angeles,
Under this holding, therefore, it matters not whether the county wishes to help the employer, help the union or help the public. The dispositive fact is that Congress has declared certain aspects of the collective bargaining process to be beyond the control of state and local government. In a sequel to Golden State I, the Supreme Court held that a city is liable for the attorney's fees of a party that successfully sues the city for intruding into the collective bargaining process contrary to the NLRA preemption rules. The NLRA preemption rules create an "interest in being free of governmental regulation[,] . . . a right specifically conferred on employers and employees by the NLRA." GoldenState Transit Corp. v. City of Los Angeles, ___ U.S. ___,
Your second question, whether a county can favor unionized employers in the award of contracts, also must be answered no. First, the Legislature has not enabled counties to make such a choice. As you have correctly pointed out, counties have only such powers as the Legislature has conferred on them expressly or by clear implication. Maier v. Racine County,
But even if the county had authority to favor unionized companies to the exclusion of the nonunionized companies, such an exclusion probably would violate the NLRA preemption doctrine. I am aware, of course, that a federal appeals court has held that NLRA preemption principles are not violated by such favoritism. See Image Carrier Corp. v. Beame,
Accordingly, in my opinion the answer to both your questions is no.
DJH:CDH *Page 89
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